Summary
This is a large introduction to Christian mission that signals both contemporary relevance and theological breadth. The title does not promise a narrow handbook on overseas work alone, but an account of Christian mission today, which usually means the book is trying to connect biblical foundations, historical development, and present responsibility in one sustained treatment. That is exactly the sort of resource many pastors need, because mission can easily be reduced either to activism without theology or to theology without movement. A strong introductory volume should resist both errors. At over four hundred pages this is not brief, but it may be substantial in the best sense, broad enough to shape a reader understanding rather than merely stir enthusiasm for a moment. The question is whether that breadth is carried with theological steadiness and ministry usefulness. The indications here are encouraging.
Strengths
The chief strength of a book like this is integrative vision. A good theology of mission must do more than explain practical strategy. It must show how mission arises from the being and purposes of God, how it is anchored in Scripture, how it relates to the church, and how it speaks to the present world without surrendering the distinctiveness of the gospel. The title and scale of this volume suggest that kind of integration. That makes it especially valuable for pastors and trainees who need their instincts formed, not merely their methods adjusted. Another likely strength is its ability to serve as a course text. Books that bring together biblical theology, missiology, and cultural engagement often become useful anchors for structured learning. They help readers see connections across subjects that are too often taught in fragments. If done well, that can strengthen both preaching and church leadership.
Limitations
The main limitation is the one attached to any large introductory text. Because it tries to cover so much ground, some topics will be handled more suggestively than fully. Readers will still need more concentrated books on difficult questions such as contextualisation, mission in secular societies, interfaith engagement, and the practical realities of cross cultural church planting. Another limitation is simply time. Busy ministers may admire a book like this without actually finishing it, which means its value will depend on deliberate use. A further caution is that broad mission texts can sometimes assume a framework that not all readers share at every point. Even where the overall theological direction is strong, ministers should still test emphases carefully and read with Bible open. Yet those cautions do not diminish the likely usefulness of the book.
How We Would Use It
We would use this readily as a core training text for interns, pastoral trainees, and leaders who need a fuller vision of mission. It could also support a church eldership or missions group that wants to build stronger theological foundations for present work. Because of its breadth, it is unlikely to be a quick dip in and out book. It is better treated as a shaping volume, read slowly, discussed carefully, and then mined for ongoing reflection. In that role, it may prove exceptionally valuable by helping churches recover mission as an outworking of the gospel story itself.
Closing Recommendation
This appears to be one of the stronger broad introductions to Christian mission, and it looks especially valuable for pastors and trainees who want their missionary thinking formed at a deeper level.
Michael W. Goheen
Michael W. Goheen is a Canadian Reformed theologian and missional thinker of the contemporary period, working within an evangelical and confessional Reformed framework.
His writing has focused on the biblical story as a framework for Christian mission and cultural engagement. Goheen has contributed significantly to discussions about the church role within the wider world, drawing on themes of kingdom, covenant, and the unfolding narrative of Scripture. His books often seek to help believers understand the Bible as a unified story that shapes the identity and calling of the people of God.
Readers value his work for its clear presentation of the biblical storyline and its call for churches to recover a missionary vision rooted in the gospel. His writing helps pastors and students connect biblical theology with faithful Christian witness in contemporary society.
Theological Perspective: Reformed